Sometimes called the "doomsday vault," the Svalbard Global Seed Vault is seen as humanity's last hope against extinction after a world crisis. Though its mission is to keep the world's seeds safe, its creation wasn't meant as a way to reseed the world after a world-scale catastrophe.
Pages
▼
Saturday, 31 August 2019
Friday, 30 August 2019
AFAN Oyo state election comes up September
Congratulates new agric comm
The proper election into the executive positions of the Oyo
state All Farmers Association
of Nigeria (AFAN) has been scheduled to come up sometimes in September, 2019
according to the Chairman of the chapter Engr. Ayinla Olumide who also
congratulated the new commissioner of agriculture, Hon. Muyiwa Ejekunle on
behalf of all other members.
FG sets to reposition groundnut for global competitiveness
*Stakeholders applaud government
The Federal
Government (FG) through its Ministry of Industry Trade and Investment (FMITI) has
developed an implementation work plan that will make groundnut productivity
more competitive in the global markets just as the major stakeholders have
commended and described the moved as being long overdue.
'Martian Gardens' Help Scientists Find the Best Veggies to Grow on Mars
Simulated "Martian gardens" are helping NASA scientists learn which plants astronauts might be able to grow on the Red Planet.
Thursday, 29 August 2019
New Tech Sheds Light on the Future of Food
The challenges of growing enough food to feed the world have grown more severe in the 21st century. We need to feed more people with limited agricultural land and resources.
Wednesday, 28 August 2019
Agrochemical Market | Agrium Inc., Bayer A.G., E.I. Du Pont De Nemours & Company, Indian Farmers Fertiliser Cooperative
Global Agrochemical Market Report (Industry Analysis, Applications, Growth, Trends) and Future Forecast (2016-2026) is the latest report published by Straits Research which is committed to delivering details of the Agrochemical industry.
There are certified seeds in Nigeria, say stakeholders
Contrary to
the position of the new Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Alhaji Sabo
Nanono, that there were no certified seeds in Nigeria, stakeholders have said
that there are certified seeds in Nigeria and that many West African countries
depend on Nigeria to procure their seeds saying statement like this could mar
the country market potential..
Tuesday, 27 August 2019
Farmers show their determination against shale gas in Supreme Court of Appeal
The Supreme Court of Appeal in Bloemfontein heard arguments last week by Agri SA's provincial affiliate, Agri Eastern Cape, regarding the legality of technical regulations for fracking previously promulgated by the Minister of Mineral Resources.
Stakeholders Call For Competitive Agric Seeds Industry in Nigeria
Stakeholders made a strong case last week for a competitive seeds industry in Nigeria, that will contribute to the growth and development of a virile Agricultural sector.
Monday, 26 August 2019
CAR-Agriculture Recovery and Agribusiness Development Support Project (ARADSP)
The development objective of the Agriculture Recovery and Agribusiness Development Support Project for Central African Republic is to increase agriculture productivity of small scale farmers, strengthen capacity of micro, small and medium agribusiness enterprises in the project area, and provide immediate and effective response in the event of an Eligible Crisis or Emergency.
Sunday, 25 August 2019
Why agriculture and food science?
Agriculture is moving centre stage. Consume less meat? Grow and eat more plants? Protect the environment?
Saturday, 24 August 2019
Colorado agriculture gets some good news on tariffs; but trade winds still stormy for farmers, other businesses
In the midst of the U.S.-China tariff battles, there’s good news from the trade front for farmers and ranchers in Colorado and across the country: Japan is lifting long-standing restrictions on the imports of U.S. beef and President Donald Trump is lifting tariffs on aluminum and steel from Mexico and Canada.
Friday, 23 August 2019
Yesterday images at the 31th meeting of Technical Sub -Committee on Naming, Registration and Release of crops varieties at NACGRAB, Ibadan chaired by Prof. Olusoji Olafajo, with Dr. Sunday Aladele, Registrar NVRC and Mr. Y. D Ndipaya of ARCN. Here Dr. Yahaya and Dr. Turaki Zakare of Lake Chad giving submission for the release of IMAM (Attila 7) as LCRIWHIT 11. This is to accelerate wheat production in Nigeria. The committee will today Friday 23th present the variety for National approval.
Yesterday images at the 31th meeting of Technical Sub -Committee on Naming, Registration and Release of crops varieties at NACGRAB, Ibadan chaired by Prof. Olusoji Olafajo, with Dr. Sunday Aladele, Registrar NVRC and Mr. Y. D Ndipaya of ARCN. Here Dr. Yahaya and Dr. Turaki Zakare of Lake Chad giving submission for the release of IMAM (Attila 7) as LCRIWHIT 11. This is to accelerate wheat production in Nigeria. The committee will today Friday 23th present the variety for National approval.
Crop Failure and Fading Food Supplies: Climate Change's Lasting Impact (Op-Ed)
Marlene Cimons is a Washington, D.C. based freelance writer who specializes in science, health and the environment.
Thursday, 22 August 2019
Images speak at a one day stakeholders forum on the presentation of a draft on groundnut policy for Nigeria.
Images speaks at a one day stakeholders forum on the presentation of a draft on groundnut policy for Nigeria..... see more images below..
'Last-Resort' Antibiotics Fail Against New Superbugs
Some bacteria have finally breached the last wall of humans' antibiotic stronghold, according to a new study from China. In the study, researchers found a gene in one strain of Escherichia coli (E. coli) that protects these bacteria against one of the antibiotics considered to be a last resort.
Wednesday, 21 August 2019
Images speak at the regional workshop on the '' climate finance and support mechanisms for a resilient Agriculture sector in West & Central Africa''
Images speak at the regional workshop on the '' climate finance and support mechanisms for a resilient Agriculture sector in West & Central Africa''... see more images below.
Climate Change Is Transforming the World's Food Supply
Ultimately, climate change will reduce the amount of food grown around the world, Myers told Live Science.
Tuesday, 20 August 2019
NAIC promises training for farmers across the nation
The Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, the Nigerian Agricultural Insurance Corporation, Mrs Folashade Joseph, |
The Chief Executive
Officer (CEO) Nigerian Agricultural Insurance Corporation (NAIC) Mrs Folashade
Joseph has promised that all farmers across the nation would be properly trained
on using insurance covers as strategy to mitigating losses on farming and
maximization of profit in agribusiness.
I will reposition oil-palm to benefit farmers, off takers - Alphonsus Inyang
The Group Managing
Director, of Hebron Integrated Farms and Mills across the globe, Mr. Alphonsus
Inyang recently had a chat with FoodFarmNews during which he promised to overhaul the oil
palm business value chains where small holders farmers would be well supported
to own sustainable plantations that processors can depend upon to produce
vegetable oil, pharmaceutical and cosmetics products saying the idea of
allowing the big companies to be owners of plantations and processing is a
denial to owners of land, among other things, if he is elected as the President
of the Association National Palm Produce Association of Nigeria (NPPAN). Excerpts...
Monday, 19 August 2019
Editorial- NIRSAL should face its core mandate
Activities
of the Nigeria Incentive Risk-based Agricultural Lending (NIRSAL) in the
agricultural value chains have of recent, become a thing of concern as the
organization has deviated from its core mandates and has been meddling in
financial and agronomics activities that are outright contradictions to its
core mandate as an institution established to ensure access to funds by farmers
and others in the value chain by de-risking the process.
Quality, contractors’ disappearance, other issues stall agro-processing project
The delay in
the execution of the agro processing centre projects across the country has
been attributed to the disappearance of contractors and the disagreement between
investors, contractors and equipment fabricators over the use of substandard
materials by the fabricators. This was revealed during the meeting of the
stakeholders held in Abuja.
Sunday, 18 August 2019
Potential for reduced methane from cows
An international team of scientists has shown it is possible to breed cattle to reduce their methane emissions.
Saturday, 17 August 2019
Grazing animals drove domestication of grain crops
Many familiar grains today, like quinoa, amaranth, and the millets, hemp, and buckwheat, all have traits that indicate that they coevolved to be dispersed by large grazing mammals.
Friday, 16 August 2019
NAQS rebuts food dealers’ claim
The Nigerian
Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS) has debunked an extortion allegation
made against its officials at some major duty posts of the country by the foodstuff
Dealers Association of Nigeria (FSDAN) .
FG- AFDB inject $174.85m for farmers’ training says Dr. Arabi
The new National
Coordinator, Agricultural Transformation Agenda
Programme (ATAPS-Project 1) Dr. Ibrahim Mohammed Arabi has said that seven
strategically farming states of the federation comprising of 33 local
governments and 200 rural communities are currently benefiting in the $174.85m meant
for capacity building for best agronomic practice with improved technologies to
mitigate poverty in the country.
Global farming trends threaten food security
Citrus fruits, coffee and avocados: The food on our tables has become more diverse in recent decades. However, global agriculture does not reflect this trend. Monocultures are increasing worldwide, taking up more land than ever.
Thursday, 15 August 2019
Wildfires disrupt important pollination processes by moths and increase extinction risks
Previous studies have shown the flush of pollen-producing wildflowers after a fire can benefit the day-time pollinators such as bees and butterflies.
Wednesday, 14 August 2019
Early arrival of spring disrupts the mutualism between plants and pollinators
Kudo of Hokkaido University and Elisabeth J. Cooper of the Arctic University of Norway have demonstrated that early snowmelt results in the spring ephemeral Corydalis ambigua flowering ahead of the emergence of its pollinator, the bumblebee.
Tuesday, 13 August 2019
Researchers can finally modify plant mitochondrial DNA
Nuclear DNA was first edited in the early 1970s, chloroplast DNA was first edited in 1988, and animal mitochondrial DNA was edited in 2008. However, no tool previously successfully edited plant mitochondrial DNA.
Monday, 12 August 2019
Genetic breakthrough in cereal crops could help improve yields worldwide
A team of Clemson University scientists has achieved a breakthrough in the genetics of senescence in cereal crops with the potential to dramatically impact the future of food security in the era of climate change.
Sunday, 11 August 2019
A SOUTH CAROLINA FARMHER OFFERS SOLID ADVICE TO OTHER YOUNG PEOPLE.
On a recent trip filming in the Southeastern U.S., I travelled through Alabama and Georgia before ending up in Charleston, South Carolina.
Friday, 9 August 2019
The Department of Agriculture Food and the Marine celebrates National Biodiversity Week
The Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine Michael Creed T.D. welcomes a week which places biodiversity firmly in the spotlight and recognises recent calls for urgency in protecting biodiversity.
Association wants policy for 30% mushroom content for hotels confectionary
FMITI advises members on unity
The
President, National Mushroom Growers, Processors and Marketers Association of
Nigeria (NAM-GP-MAN) Chief Micheal Awunor has said that 30% local content
inclusion of mushroom in all our confectioneries in the entire stores and
hotels across the country would galvanize its productivity saying government provision
of policy support in this regards would effectively drive the action plan of
the produce just as the Permanent Secretary (PS), Federal ministry of Industry,
Trade and Investment (FMITI), Mr. Edet Sunday Apan enjoined the executives to
work harmoniously towards achieving success.
Thursday, 8 August 2019
Ministry prays for technocrat as minister
The
officials of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD) may
have been praying for a technocrat as minister based on the experiences from
the immediate past one who they claimed did not do much professionally to
assist the sector. FoodFarmNews reliably
gathered.
Tuesday, 6 August 2019
Images speak at the ATASP-1 media engagement held in Abuja.
A Journey from City Dwellers to Regenerative Farmers: THE BIGGEST LITTLE FARM
My wife Molly specialized in farm-to-table cuisine and I was a documentary filmmaker, but we had a collective dream that our once-coveted identities as filmmaker and chef couldn’t satisfy… to become farmers.
Monday, 5 August 2019
Earliest evidence of the cooking and eating of starch
New discoveries made at the Klasies River Cave in South Africa's southern Cape, where charred food remains from hearths were found, provide the first archaeological evidence that anatomically modern humans were roasting and eating plant starches, such as those from tubers and rhizomes, as early as 120,000 years ago.
Sunday, 4 August 2019
NAQS to Food Dealers: User Fees Not Extortion
DG The Nigerian Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS) Dr.Vincent Isegbe |
Organic animal farms benefit birds nesting in agricultural environments
The abundance of bird species living in agricultural environments has decreased both in Finland and elsewhere in Europe. Attempts to rectify the situation have been made with the help of agri-environment-climate subsidies.
Saturday, 3 August 2019
Women We Love: 25 Influential Women in Food and Agriculture
There are hundreds of women who inspire us at Food Tank. They are entrepreneurs, stewards of the land, business owners, researchers, farmers, and innovators who are the backbone of the world’s food systems.
Friday, 2 August 2019
Imperfect Teaming up with Whole Foods Market to Sell “Ugly” Produce
Last week, grocer Giant Eagle became the largest supermarket in the United States to start selling ugly produce with its new Produce with Personality program. Whole Foods Market announced on Friday that they will soon be joining Giant Eagle as the only large supermarket chains in the United States selling imperfect produce.
Thursday, 1 August 2019
Nigeria spends $4b importing wheat annually, says expert
The Support
to Agricultural Research for Development of Strategic Crops (SARDC-SC) wheat
compact coordinator for Technology for African Agricultural Transformation
(TAAT), Solomon Assefa has said Nigeria spends 4 billion dollars annually on
the importation of wheat. He said this at the TAAT African international
conference meeting on wheat value chain held in Abuja.
FAO, FG partner to develop livestock
The Food and
Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) in collaboration with the
Nigerian Government (FG) has launched the report on African Sustainable Livestock
(ASL) 2050 towards the development of the sector to ensure food security and
wealth creation.
DRAFT COMMUNIQUE ISSUED AT THE END OF ONE DAY AGRICULTURAL MECHANIZATION STAKEHOLDERS MEETING ON THE WAY FORWARD TOWARDS EXTENSION OF NEW INNOVATIONS IN AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT HELD AT THE NATIONAL CENTRE FOR AGRICULTURAL MECHANIZATION (NCAM) ON TUESDAY, 16TH JULY, 2019.
The
call for Nigeria to divest from oil is now more important since the need for
crude oil may decline in the face of utilization of other sources of energy such
as renewable, electrical, solar, hydro, wind, etc.
Celebrating A Diversity of Opinions Is Key to Collaboration, Says Erin Fitzgerald
On “Food Talk with Dani Nierenberg,” Erin Fitzgerald, CEO of the U.S. Farmers and Ranchers Alliance (USFRA), talks about the alliance’s new direction: not only bolstering the image of agriculture and supporting farmers, but also addressing sustainability and education in agriculture.
Introduction of hermetic storage reduces food loss in Yobe
A Case for the Review of Soil Science Curriculum in Tertiary Institutions in Nigeria Submitted to the 43rd Annual General Meeting of the SSSN, July 17, 2019 at the Federal University of Agriculture, Makurdi, Benue State. Prof Peter Ikor Ogban, fssn Department of Soil Science University of Calabar, Calabar.
From the SSSN Platform